“And if you weren’t my sister’s
husband,” Nichols retorted, turning away, “I’d
take a little trip over to Penzance and say a few words
at the Police Station there.”

Granet laughed good-humouredly.

“You fellows don’t need to get bad-tempered
with one another,” he observed. “Look
here, I shall have three days here. I’ll
take one of you each day—­make a fair thing
of it, eh? You to-morrow, Nichols, and you the
next day Lethbridge. I’m not particular
about the weather, as Job Rowsell can tell you, and
I’ve sailed a boat since I was a boy. I’m
no land-lubber, am I, Rowsell?”

“No, you can sail the boat all right,”
Rowsell admitted, looking back over his shoulder.
“You’d sail it into Hell itself, if one’d
let you. Come on, you boys, if there’s
any one of you as fancies to drink. I’m
wet to the skin.”

Nichols’ boat was duly prepared at nine o’clock
on the following morning. Lethbridge shouted
to him from the rails.

“Gentleman’s changed his mind, I reckon.
He went off on the eight o’clock boat for Penzance.”

Nichols commenced stolidly to furl his sails again.

“It’s my thinking Lethbridge,” he
said, as he clambered into the dinghy, “that
there’s things going on in this island which
you and me don’t understand. I’m
for a few plain words with Job Rowsell, though he’s
my own sister’s husband.”

“Plain words is more than you’ll get from
Job,” Lethbridge replied gloomily. “He
slept last night on the floor at the ‘Blue Crown,’
and he’s there this morning, clamouring for
brandy and pawing the air. He’s got the
blue devils, that’s what he’s got.”

“There’s money,” Nichols declared
solemnly, “some money, that is, that does no
one any good.”

CHAPTER XXXIII

There was a shrill whistle from the captain’s
bridge, and the steamer, which had scarcely yet gathered
way, swung slowly around. Rushing up towards
it through the mists came a little naval launch, in
the stern of which a single man was seated. In
an incredibly short space of time it was alongside,
the passenger had climbed up the rope ladder, the
pinnace had sheered off and the steamer was once more
heading towards the Channel.

The newly-arrived passenger was making his way towards
the saloon when a voice which seemed to come from
behind a pile of rugs heaped around a steamer-chair,
arrested his progress.

“Hugh! Major Thomson!”

He stopped short. Geraldine shook herself free
from her rugs and sat up. They looked at one
another in astonishment.